Sir Charles Asgill, 2nd Baronet

General
Sir Charles Asgill
Colourised image of Asgill from a mezzotint of lost original by Thomas Phillips
Personal details
Born(1762-04-06)6 April 1762
London, England
Died23 July 1823(1823-07-23) (aged 61)
London, England
Political partyWhig
SpouseJemima Sophia Ogle
RelationsSir Charles Asgill, 1st Baronet and Sarah Theresa Pratviel.
Residence(s)29 Old Burlington Street, London (1778-1785). 6 York Street, St. James's (1791–1821)[1]
Alma materWestminster School
University of Göttingen
Signature
Military service
Allegiance Kingdom of Great Britain (pre Acts of Union 1800)
 United Kingdom (post Acts of Union 1800)
Branch/service British Army
Years of service1778–1823
RankGeneral
Battles/warsAmerican War of Independence (1775–1783)
Flanders campaign (1792–1795)
Irish Rebellion of 1798
Irish Rebellion of 1803

General Sir Charles Asgill, 2nd Baronet, GCH (6 April 1762 – 23 July 1823) was a career soldier in the British Army. At the end of the American Revolutionary War he became the principal of the so-called Asgill Affair of 1782, in which his retaliatory death sentence while a prisoner of war was commuted by the American forces who held him, due to the direct intervention of the government of France. Later in his career, he was involved in the Flanders campaign, the suppression of the Irish Rebellion of 1798 and was Commander of the Eastern Division of Ireland during the Irish rebellion of 1803.

Early life and education

Charles Asgill was born on 6 April 1762,[2] as the only son of a well-connected family. His father, Sir Charles Asgill, had been a former Lord Mayor of London,[3] and was a London banker.[2] His mother, Sarah Theresa Pratviel, was of a French Huguenot family,[4] whose father was secretary to the ambassador to Spain.[2] The family home was Richmond Place, now known as Asgill House, in Surrey.[5] Asgill was educated at Westminster School and the University of Göttingen.[6]

Asgill's handwriting in 1778: "An Honest Man is the noblest work of God."

Against his father's wishes, who offered a sizeable annual income to stay in England,[7] Asgill entered the army on 27 February 1778, just before his 16th birthday, as an ensign in the 1st Foot Guards, a regiment today known as the Grenadier Guards. Asgill became lieutenant in the First Foot Guards, promoted to the rank of captain, in February 1781.[2][n 1]

The Asgill Affair

Prisoner of war

Asgill was ordered to North America at the beginning of 1781, to fight in the American Revolutionary War.[8] Serving under General Cornwallis,[7] he fought in the Siege of Yorktown, and became an American prisoner of war following Cornwallis's capitulation in October 1781.[2]

Even after the capitulation at Yorktown, violence persisted between the patriots and loyalists.[9] When a loyalist named Philip White was killed by patriots,[10][11] the loyalists retaliated. A captain of the Monmouth Militia and privateer, Joshua Huddy, was captured in the village of Toms River, New Jersey and taken to a prison in New York. Under the auspices of a prisoner exchange, Richard Lippincott took Huddy from British custody and had him hanged,[9] by order of William Franklin.[12][13] New Jersey militia protested; to avoid further outbreaks of violence George Washington ordered Moses Hazen to select by lot a British officer likewise to be executed.[9] His explicit orders were communicated in letters dated 3 and 18 May 1782.[14][15]

On reading the letter of 18 May, James Gordon replied to Washington:

Lancaster 27th. May 1782. Sir It is with astonishment I read a Letter from your Excellency, dated 18th. May, directed to Brigadier General Hazen, Commanding at this Post, ordering him, to send a British Captain, taken at York-town, by Capitulation, with My Lord Cornwallis, Prisoner to Philadelphia, where 'tis said he is to suffer an ignominious Death, in the room of Capt. Huddy an American Officer...[16]

Hazen carried out Washington's orders on 27 May 1782. The selection was made at the Black Bear Tavern in Lancaster,[17] where 13 British 'conditional' officers were assembled.[9] Hazen hoped that the officers would make the selection themselves, but they refused, with one of the prisoners, Samuel Graham, writing that "With one voice we refused to have any share in a business which directly violated the terms of the treaty which placed us within General Washington's power".[18] Lots were instead drawn by a drummer boy (some sources suggest that there were two or three drummer boys)[18] and Asgill's was the one drawn alongside the word "unfortunate".[19]

According to William M. Fowler, as soon as Washington had given the order to take a hostage, he realised that what he had done was morally suspect and likely illegal. While Congress endorsed Washington's actions, others disagreed and Alexander Hamilton considered them "repugnant, wanton and unnecessary".[20]

Soon afterwards Washington wrote to Hazen about Asgill's selection, asking why apparently available 'unconditional' prisoners were not chosen and suggesting to "remedy [...] as soon as possible this Mistake".[21]

Chatham

Timothy Day's Tavern, Chatham, NJ, the location of Asgill's imprisonment in 1782

From Lancaster Asgill was transferred to Chatham. Initially he was housed in the home of Colonel Elias Dayton, who commanded the Jersey Line, who treated Asgill well, especially when he became too ill to be moved.[22] Washington ordered Asgill be held under guard.[23] He was sent to Timothy Day's Tavern, where he suffered beatings; lack of edible food; spectators paid to watch his suffering; and deprivation of letters from his family about which he was receiving information that his father was very ill and had died.[24] Although the British court martialled Lippincott for Huddy's execution, he was found not guilty on the grounds that he was acting on orders from William Franklin.[12] Washington wanted Lippincott be released to the Americans in exchange for Asgill, but was refused.[25]

During the months of Asgill's confinement, his fate drew considerable international public attention and also the direct intervention of the government of France on Asgill's behalf. Under pressure to spare Asgill, but unwilling to publicly back down from his position, Washington decided late that summer that the case had become "a great national concern, upon which an individual ought not to decide." He therefore sent the matter to be decided by the Continental Congress.[19]

Reaction and release

When Asgill's mother, Sarah Theresa, Lady Asgill, heard about her son's fate, she turned to ministers in Whitehall[26] and King George III became involved.[27][28] She then wrote a letter to the comte de Vergennes, the French Foreign Minister.[19] Vergennes showed the letter to King Louis XVI and Queen Marie Antoinette, who in turn ordered Vergennes to write to Washington saying that any violation of the 14th Article of Capitulation would be a stain on the French nation, as well as the Americans, since both nations, along with the British, had signed that Treaty. Lady Asgill sent a copy of Vergennes' letter to Washington herself, by special courier, and her copies of correspondence reached Washington before the original from Paris.[29]

Upon receipt of Vergennes' letter, enclosing that of Lady Asgill, Washington forwarded the correspondence to the Continental Congress, on 30 October as they were proposing to vote to hang Asgill.[19] The letter was read aloud before the delegates.[30] After several days of debate,[31] on 7 November, "as a compliment to the King of France",[19] Congress passed an Act releasing Asgill.[32][33]

A week later Washington wrote a letter to Asgill,[34] which he did not receive until 17 November 1782, enclosing a passport for him to return home on parole. Asgill left Chatham immediately that day.[35]

Aftermath

Coat of arms of Sir Charles Asgill, 2nd Baronet. The motto translates as "regardless of his own interest".[36]

Four years after the events of 1782, news reached Washington that Asgill was apparently spreading rumours of ill-treatment whilst in custody in America. Washington was outraged, maintaining that Asgill had been treated well.[19][37] In response, Washington had his correspondence on the matter published in the New Haven Gazette and Connecticut Magazine[38][39] on 16 November 1786 (with the exception of his letter of 18 May 1782 to Hazen which shows Washington's willingness to violate Article XIV of the Yorktown Articles of Capitulation).[40] When Asgill read the account, he wrote to the editor on 20 December 1786, denying that he had spread rumours, and detailing his mistreatment while in captivity. Asgill's letter was not published until 2019, when a copy appeared in an issue of The Journal of Lancaster County’s Historical Society dedicated to the Asgill Affair.[17][41]

Peter Henriques writes that the Asgill Affair "could have left an ugly blot on George Washington's reputation", calling it "a blip that reminds us even the greatest of men make mistakes".[42]

Subsequent career

Portrait of the Duke of York by Sir Thomas Lawrence, 1816. York appointed Asgill as an equerry.

Asgill was appointed equerry to Frederick, Duke of York in 1788;[2] he would hold this post until his death.[43] On 15 September 1788 he inherited the Asgill baronetcy upon the death of his father,[44] and on 3 March 1790 he was promoted to command a company in the 1st Foot Guards,[45] with the rank of lieutenant-colonel.[46][n 1] Under the Duke of York he took part in the Flanders campaign in 1793. Two years later he rose to the rank of colonel,[2] and later that year commanded a battalion of the Guards at Warley Camp, intended for foreign service.[46]

Irish Rebellion of 1798

In June 1797, Asgill was appointed brigadier-general on the Staff in Ireland. He was granted the rank of major-general on 1 January 1798,[48][46] and was promoted Third Major of the 1st Foot Guards in November that year.[49][n 2] In his service records, he states he "was very actively employed against the Rebels during the Rebellion in 1798 and received the repeated thanks of the Commander of the Forces and the Government for my Conduct and Service."[8]

General Sir Charles Asgill marched from Kilkenny and attacked and dispersed the rebels.[50]

Princess Frederica Charlotte of Prussia by John Hoppner; Sophia Asgill Lady of the Bedchamber sits at her feet.[51]

The city of Kilkenny presented Asgill with a snuff box for his "energy and exertion" which was praised by the Loyalists.[52]

On 9 May 1800 Asgill was transferred from the Foot Guards to be colonel commandant of the 2nd Battalion, 46th (South Devonshire) Regiment of Foot.[53][54] He went onto half-pay when the 2nd Battalion was disbanded in 1802.[55][8] Later that year he was again appointed to the Staff in Ireland, commanding the garrison in Dublin and the instruction camps at the Curragh.[46]

Service in Dublin

In 1801, before being appointed to the garrison in Dublin, Asgill found himself defending the right of Henry Ellis (in the neighbourhood of Kilkenny) to be properly remunerated for the invaluable intelligence he had provided during the rebellion. His information had made a significant contribution to the suppression of the rebels, but he paid a severe price for his loyalty after the fighting was over. His neighbours persecuted him; tried to kill him; and ruined his business as a miller. The British were very slow to pay his annuity of £30 per annum for life. Sir Charles Asgill and Lord Castlereagh took up his cause (with a Mr A. Marsden) to see that he was properly compensated.[56]

In his service records Asgill states: "On the 18th March 1803 I was reappointed to the Staff of Ireland, and placed in the Command of the Eastern District, in which the Garrison of Dublin is included; I was in Command during the Rebellion which broke out in the City in July 1803."[8]

Asgill was promoted to lieutenant general in January 1805.[57]

Asgill was appointed Colonel of the Regiment of the 5th West India Regiment (February 1806);[58] of the 85th Regiment of Foot (October 1806);[59] and of the 11th (North Devonshire) Regiment (25 February 1807),[54][60] for which he raised a second battalion in the space of six months.[61] Asgill mentions the men of the 11th in his will, in a codicil written on 15 July 1823, eight days before his death.[62]

Asgill, having established a second battalion of the 11th Regiment of Foot, had to pay to equip his men out of his own pocket – he then experienced difficulty receiving a refund from the Treasury. [63]

Retirement

Asgill received a letter from the Duke of York, on 3 January 1812, telling him that on account of Lieutenant General Sir John Hope's appointment to the Command of the Forces in Ireland, that "you will unavoidably be discontinued on the staff of the Army."[64]

Asgill was almost 50 years old at the time, and explains, in his reply to Colonel John McMahon, Private Secretary to the Prince Regent: "I shall for the first time in my life return to England with a reduced income, and without any employment, which is not very pleasant to my feelings after an uninterrupted service of thirty four years, fifteen of which have been spent on the Staff of Ireland."[65]

Asgill continued to serve on the Staff until 1812,[46] and on 4 June 1814 he was promoted to general.[66] In 1820 he was made a Knight Grand Cross of the Hanoverian Guelphic Order.[67]

Personal life and death

On 28 August 1790 Asgill married Jemima Sophia (1770-1819), sixth daughter of Admiral Sir Chaloner Ogle, 1st Baronet.[68] From 1791 to 1821 Asgill lived at No. 6 York Street, off St James's Square.[1] The Asgills were associated with the duchess of Devonshire's circle.[69] They enjoyed the theatre as well, frequently in the company of Richard Brinsley Sheridan, a personal friend.[70] Lady Asgill died in York Street on 30 May 1819.[71][72]

Asgill died in 1823. The final two years of Asgill's life were spent at the home of his mistress, Mary Ann Goodchild, otherwise Mansel.[73] Two codicils to his will were written and signed there shortly before his death.[62] Upon his death, the Asgill baronetcy became extinct. Most biographies claim he died without issue,[citation needed] although one source states that Sophia bore him children.[74]

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b The system of purchasing commissions gave rise to some idiosyncrasies in rank and posting in the prestigious Household and Guard regiments and the value of commissions in these regiments. Regimental appointments were owned by officers of higher ranks than associated with an equivalent position in a line regiment. The appointment of company commander (normally a captaincy) was held by a lieutenant-colonel and styled captain and lieutenant-colonel.[47]
  2. ^ Third major is another position peculiar to Foot Guards regiments of the time. Nominally the second-in-command of each battalion (normally a major's appointment), by seniority of battalions within the regiment (in this case, the third battalion), these positions would be owned by more senior officers.[47]

References

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  2. ^ a b c d e f g Asgill, Charles. "second baronet (1762–1823)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/9780198614128-e-733. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  3. ^ Henriques 2020, pp. 68-74.
  4. ^ Henriques 2020, p. 68.
  5. ^ Historic England. "Asgill House (1180412)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 24 May 2015.
  6. ^ "Perfidious America". The Economist. 20 December 2014. pp. 64–66. Retrieved 3 September 2019.
  7. ^ a b Mayo 1938, p. 164.
  8. ^ a b c d "Statement of the Service of Lieutenant General Sir Charles Asgill Bart. Colonel of the 11th Regiment of Foot". War Office and predecessors: Secretary-at-War, Secretary of State for War, and Related Bodies, Registers, Box: WO 25/744 A, pp. 8-12. Kew: National Archives.
  9. ^ a b c d "General Washington's terrible dilemma". Massachusetts Historical Society. Retrieved 21 August 2019.
  10. ^ "To George Washington from Not Assigned, 1 May 1782 (Early Access Document)". The Papers of George Washington. Founders Online. 1 May 1782. Archived from the original on 5 June 2020. Philip White Taken lately at Shrewsburry [sic] in Action...The Dragoons told him they would give him a chance for his Life, and ordered him to Run—which he attempted but had not gone thirty yards from them before they Shot him.
  11. ^ "Perfidious America". The Economist. 20 December 2014. pp. 64–66. Retrieved 3 September 2019. Accounts of his death differ: his brother Aaron, captured with him, signed an affidavit attesting that he was killed while trying to escape. Aaron later recanted, claiming that his captors had threatened to kill him unless he signed; the truth, he now maintained, was that the American militiamen had executed Philip White in cold blood.
  12. ^ a b Chernow 2010, p. 426.
  13. ^ Allen, Thomas B. (2014). "Ben Franklin's Tory Bastard". Military History. 30 (5): 34–41.
  14. ^ Washington, George (3 May 1782). "From George Washington to Moses Hazen, 3 May 1782 (Early Access Document)". The Papers of George Washington. Founders Online. Archived from the original on 18 August 2020. Retrieved 18 August 2020. You will therefore immediately on recet of this designate by Lot for the above purpose—a British Captain who is an unconditional Prisoner, if such a one is in our possession—if not—a Lieutenant under the same circumstances...
  15. ^ Washington, George (18 May 1782). "From George Washington to Moses Hazen, 18 May 1782 (Early Access Document)". The Papers of George Washington. Founders Online. Archived from the original on 18 August 2020. Retrieved 18 August 2020. ...no one of that Description is in our power—I am therefore under the disagreeable necessity to Direct, that you imediately [sic] select, in the Manner before presented, from among all the British Captains...
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  17. ^ a b "The Journal of Lancaster County's Historical Society Vol. 120, No. 3 Winter 2019".
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  22. ^ Washington, George (18 June 1782). "From Elias Dayton to George Washington, 18 June 1782 (Early Access Document)". The Papers of George Washington. Founders Online. Archived from the original on 27 September 2020. Retrieved 18 August 2020. —Presuming therefore on your Excellencys [sic] lenity, and that his safety was the only object, I have for the present confined him a close prisoner at my own quarters where he will be in perfect security until farther orders.
  23. ^ Washington, George (11 June 1782). "From George Washington to Elias Dayton, 11 June 1782 (Early Access Document)". The Papers of George Washington. Founders Online. Archived from the original on 15 February 2021. Retrieved 18 August 2020. I am informed that Capt. Asgill is at Chatham, without Guard, & under no constraint—This if true is certainly wrong—I wish to have the young Gentleman treated with all the Tenderness possible, consistent with his present Situation—But untill [sic] his Fate is determined, he must be considered as a close prisoner & be kept in the greatest Security...
  24. ^ Abel, Michael (2019). ""A Prison...Was Denied Me" Chatham, New Jersey, May–November, 1782". The Journal of Lancaster County's Historical Society. 120 (3): 107–110. OCLC 2297909.
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  26. ^ "Letter from Sir Thomas Townshend, to Sir Guy Carleton, 10 July 1782". Records of the Colonial Office, Commonwealth and Foreign and Commonwealth Offices, Empire Marketing Board, and related bodies relating to the administration of Britain's colonies, Box: CO 5/106/019. The National Archives. Retrieved 15 January 2021.
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  29. ^ Mayo 1938, p. 242.
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  32. ^ Mayer, Holly A. (2021). Congress's Own: A Canadian Regiment, the Continental Army, and American Union. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press. p. 255. ISBN 9780806169927.
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  34. ^ Washington, George (13 November 1782). "From George Washington to Charles Asgill, 13 November 1782 (Early Access Document)". The Papers of George Washington. Founders Online. Archived from the original on 13 January 2021. Retrieved 18 August 2020. It affords me singular pleasure to have it in my power to transmit you the inclosed [sic] Copy of an Act of Congress of the 7th instant, by which you are released from the disagreeable circumstances in which you have so long been....I also inclose [sic] a passport for that purpose...I cannot take leave of you Sir without assuring you, that in whatever light my agency in this unpleasing affair may be viewed, I was never influenced thro' the whole of it by sanguinary motives; but by what I conceived a sense of my duty...
  35. ^ Vanderpoel 1921, p. 454.
  36. ^ Crabb, George (1825). Universal Historical Dictionary: Or, Explanation of the Names of Persons and Places in the Departments of Biblical, Political, and Ecclesiastical History, Mythology, Heraldry, Biography, Bibliography, Geography, and Numismatics. London: Baldwin, Cradock, and Joy. pp. ASH–ASH.
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  38. ^ Jones, Thomas (1879). History of New York During the Revolutionary War: And of the Leading Events in the Other Colonies at that Period, Volume 2. New York: The New York Historical Society. p. 485.
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  58. ^ "No. 15889". The London Gazette. 11–15 February 1806. p. 193.
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  60. ^ "No. 16006". The London Gazette. 28 February – 3 March 1807. p. 277.
  61. ^ Cannon, Richard (1845). "Historical Record of the 11th Foot or North Devon Regiment of Foot". Parker, Furnivall and Parker. p. 54.
  62. ^ a b "Will of Sir Charles Asgill of York Street Saint James's Square in the City of Westminster, Middlesex". Records of the Prerogative Court of Canterbury, Box: PROB 11/1674/133. Kew: National Archives.
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  64. ^ "Copy of a letter from HRH Frederick Duke of York to Lieutenant General Sir Charles Asgill, 3 January 1812, and Asgill's reply to Colonel John McMahon, 11 January 1812". Georgian Papers Online, Royal Collection Trust.[permanent dead link]
  65. ^ "Copy of a letter from HRH Frederick Duke of York to Lieutenant General Sir Charles Asgill, 3 January 1812, and Asgill's reply to Colonel John McMahon, 11 January 1812". Georgian Papers Online, Royal Collection Trust.
  66. ^ "No. 16906". The London Gazette. 7 June 1814. p. 1180.
  67. ^ William A. Shaw, The Knights of England (1906) vol. I, p. 449.
  68. ^ The New Annual Register for the Year 1790, p. 52.
  69. ^ Byron’s "Corbeau Blanc" The Life and Letters of Lady Melbourne, Edited by Jonathan David Gross: Glossary of Personalities. p.412
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  71. ^ The Gentleman's Magazine, vol. 89 (January–June 1819), Part I, p. 587.
  72. ^ "Lady Jemima Sophia Asgill [née Ogle]". Lord Byron and his Times, with additional references. Retrieved 30 October 2020.
  73. ^ Kingsley, Nick (2 December 2015). "(197) Asgill of Asgill House, Richmond, baronets". Landed families of Britain and Ireland.
  74. ^ A New Biographical Dictionary, of 3000 Cotemporary Public Characters, British and Foreign, of All Ranks and Professions. G. B. Whittaker. 1825. pp. 65–66.

Bibliography

Further reading

  • Ammundsen, Anne (2023). The Charles Asgill Affair: Setting the Record Straight. Berwyn Heights, MD: Heritage Books. ISBN 9780788429088.
  • Everest, Allan S. (1976). "VI Moses Hazen and the Canadian Refugees in the American Revolution". Between War and Peace, 1781–1783. Syracuse University Press. pp. 96–112. doi:10.2307/j.ctv64h762.10. Retrieved 28 January 2023 – via JSTOR.
  • Haffner, Gerald O., (1957) "Captain Charles Asgill, An Incident of 1782," History Today, vol. 7, no. 5.
  • Melbourne, Lady Elizabeth Milbanke Lamb (1998) Byron's "Corbeau Blanc" The Life and Letters of Lady Melbourne Edited by Jonathan David Gross. p. 412, ISBN 978-0853236337
  • Pakenham, Thomas, (1969) The Year of Liberty: The Great Irish Rebellion of 1798. London: Hodder and Stoughton.
  • Pierce, Arthur D., (1960) Smugglers' Woods: Jaunts and Journeys in Colonial and Revolutionary New Jersey. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.
  • Smith, Jayne E, (2007) Vicarious atonement: revolutionary justice and the Asgill case. New Mexico State University.
  • Tombs, Robert and Tombs, Isabelle, (2006) That Sweet Enemy: The British and the French from the Sun King to the Present. London: William Heinemann.
Military offices
Preceded by Colonel of the 85th (Bucks Volunteers) Regiment of Foot
1806–1807
Succeeded by
Thomas Slaughter Stanwix
Preceded by Colonel of the 11th (the North Devonshire) Regiment of Foot
1807–1823
Succeeded by
Baronetage of Great Britain
Preceded by Baronet
(of London)
1788–1823
Extinct

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de Havilland DH 82 Tiger Moth adalah biplan 1930 dirancang oleh Geoffrey de Havilland dan dioperasikan oleh Angkatan Udara Kerajaan (RAF) dan lain-lain sebagai pelatih utama. Tiger Moth tetap dalam pelayanan dengan RAF sampai digantikan oleh de Havilland Chipmunk pada tahun 1952, ketika banyak dari pesawat kelebihan memasuki operasi sipil. Banyak negara lain yang menggunakan Tiger Moth di kedua aplikasi militer dan sipil, dan tetap digunakan secara luas sebagai pesawat rekreasi di banyak neg...

 

Neighborhood in Mexico City This article is about a neighborhood of Mexico City. For other uses, see Polanco (disambiguation). PlacePolanco Clockwise from top: Shops along Avenida Presidente Masaryk; St. Augustine Parish; Angela Peralta Amphitheater in Parque Lincoln; and Obelisk to Simón Bolivar at the Paseo de la Reforma entrance to PolancoPolancoLocation of Polanco in Central/Western Mexico CityCoordinates: 19°26′N 99°12′W / 19.433°N 99.200°W / 19.433; -99....

 

Harimizu utaki (Kuil Harimizu), kuil Ryukyu di Miyakojima, Prefektur Okinawa. Agama Ryukyu, Ryukyu Shinto (琉球神道), Nirai Kanai Shinkou (ニライカナイ信仰), atau Utaki Shinkou (御嶽信仰) adalah sistem kepercayaan adat pribumi dari Kepulauan Ryukyu. Walaupun legenda-legenda dan tradisi-tradisi yang spesifik mungkin sedikit berbeda dari tempat ke tempat dan dari pulau ke pulau, agama Ryukyu umumnya ditandai dengan pemujaan leluhur (lebih tepat disebut penghormatan leluhur) dan ...

Artikel ini membutuhkan rujukan tambahan agar kualitasnya dapat dipastikan. Mohon bantu kami mengembangkan artikel ini dengan cara menambahkan rujukan ke sumber tepercaya. Pernyataan tak bersumber bisa saja dipertentangkan dan dihapus.Cari sumber: Ali Mufiz – berita · surat kabar · buku · cendekiawan · JSTOR (Sept 2022) Biografi ini tidak memiliki sumber tepercaya sehingga isinya tidak dapat dipastikan. Bantu memperbaiki artikel ini dengan menambahkan ...

 

Partai Bajak Laut PíratarPendiriBirgitta JónsdóttirEva Lind ÞuríðardóttirHelgi Hrafn GunnarssonJón Þór ÓlafssonSmári McCarthyBjörn Þór JóhannessonJason Scott KatzDibentuk24 November 2012Kantor pusatFiskislóð 31, 101 ReykjavíkSayap pemudaUngir PiratarKeanggotaan (2015)1.443[1]IdeologiPirate politicsDirect democracyPosisi politikSinkretikAfiliasi EropaPartai Bajak Laut EropaWarna    Ungu dan hitamLambang pemiluPSitus webpiratar.is Partai Bajak Laut (bah...

 

This article is about the annual FIFA video game. For the tournament, see 2006 FIFA World Cup. For the official video game of that tournament, see 2006 FIFA World Cup (video game). This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: FIFA 06 – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (November 2023) (Learn how...

Vicherey L'église Saint-Remy. Blason Administration Pays France Région Grand Est Département Vosges Arrondissement Neufchâteau Intercommunalité Communauté de communes du Pays de Colombey et du Sud Toulois Maire Mandat Alain Abscheidt 2020-2026 Code postal 88170 Code commune 88504 Démographie Gentilé Viscariens, Viscariennes Populationmunicipale 174 hab. (2021 ) Densité 30 hab./km2 Géographie Coordonnées 48° 23′ 02″ nord, 5° 56′ 15″ ...

 

Women's role in Islamic culture This article may be too long to read and navigate comfortably. When this tag was added, its readable prose size was 22,000 words. Consider splitting content into sub-articles, condensing it, or adding subheadings. Please discuss this issue on the article's talk page. (May 2023) Part of a series onIslam Beliefs Oneness of God Angels Revealed Books Prophets Day of Resurrection Predestination Practices Profession of Faith Prayer Almsgiving Fasting Pilgrimage Texts...

 

The Sure ThingPoster promosiSutradaraRob ReinerDitulis olehStephen L. BloomJonathan RobertsPemeranJohn CusackDaphne ZunigaNicollette SheridanTanggal rilis1985Durasi100 menitNegaraAmerika SerikatBahasaInggris The Sure Thing adalah fim komedi romantis yang dirilis pada tahun 1985, disutradari oleh Rob Reiner, ditulis oleh Stephen L.Bloom dan Jonathan Roberts. Film ini menampilkan John Cusack, Daphne Zuniga, Anthony Edwards, Tim Robbins, Viveca Linfors, Boyd Gaines, and Nicolette Sheridan. Sinop...

Let It Ride logo Let It Ride is a casino table game based on poker, where the player wagers on a five-card poker hand formed by their own three cards and two community cards. It is a product of Bally Technologies, under its Shuffle Master brand. History The game was invented by Shuffle Master founder John Breeding, with the goal of fueling demand for the company's shuffling machine.[1] Initially popular in many casinos, the popularity of the game has waned since the because of its rel...

 

Австралия и Океания Территория8 510 000 км² Население43 344 271 (2021)[1] чел. Плотность5 чел./км² Включает14 государств Языкианглийский, французский  Часовые поясаот UTC-11 до UTC+14  Крупнейшие города Сидней, Окленд, Брисбен, Мельбурн, Аделаида, Перт  Медиаф...

 

Hazel Keener. Hazel Keener (22 Oktober 1904 – 7 Agustus 1979) adalah mosi aktris bergambar dari Bettendorf, Iowa. Dia dibesarkan di Davenport, Iowa. Keener memenangkan kontes kecantikan nasional yang disponsori oleh Chicago Tribune dan menggunakan kesuksesannya untuk memulai karir film di Hollywood. Dia berambut pirang, tinggi 5 kaki 6 & nbsp; inci, 128 & nbsp; lbs., Dengan tubuh ramping dan atletis. Rambutnya cokelat kastanye dan matanya abu-abu. Filmografi The Marrie...

This article is part of a series onOceanian Culture Society Shared Histories Languages Religion People Indigenous European Arts and literature Architecture Art Literature Other Cuisine Cinema Mythology Sports Symbols Flags Armorial World Heritage Sites Oceania Portalvte The Indigenous peoples of Oceania are Aboriginal Australians, Papuans, and Austronesians (Melanesians,[note 1] Micronesians, and Polynesians). These indigenous peoples have a historical continuity with pre-colonial so...

 

This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Ramu 1987 film – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (May 2023) (Learn how and when to remove this message) 1987 Indian filmRamuTheatrical release posterDirected byY. Nageswara RaoWritten byJandhyala(dialogues)Screenplay byY. Nageswara RaoStory byV...

 

梅拉蒂·达伊瓦·奥克塔维亚尼Melati Daeva Oktavianti基本資料代表國家/地區 印度尼西亞出生 (1994-10-28) 1994年10月28日(29歲)[1] 印度尼西亞万丹省西冷[1]身高1.68米(5英尺6英寸)[1]握拍右手[1]主項:女子雙打、混合雙打職業戰績48勝–27負(女雙)109勝–56負(混雙)最高世界排名第4位(混雙-普拉文·喬丹)(2020年3月17日[2])現時世界排名第...

NASA group established by the Obama administration to clarify US aerospace's future Logo of the Augustine Committee The Review of United States Human Space Flight Plans Committee, better known as the HSF Committee, Augustine Commission, or Augustine Committee, was a group convened by NASA at the request of the Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP), to review the nation's human spaceflight plans to ensure a vigorous and sustainable path to achieving its boldest aspirations in space.&#...

 

نادي الهلال السعودي موسم 1978–79موسم 1978–79الرئيس عبد الله بن ناصر بن عبد العزيز آل سعودالمدرب ماريو زاجالوملعبملعب الأمير فيصل بن فهدالدوري السعودي الممتازالبطل (اللقب الثاني) الطقم الداخلي → 1977-78 80-1979 ← موسم نادي الهلال السعودي لكرة القدم 1978–79 يعتبر الموسم الواحد والعشري�...

 

Hospital Universitario de Maracaibo Ministerio de Salud de Venezuela Vista del hospitalLocalizaciónPaís  VenezuelaLocalidad Avenida 16 Guajira, vía a ZirumaMaracaibo  VenezuelaCoordenadas 10°40′23″N 71°37′42″O / 10.673194444444, -71.628388888889Datos generalesFundación 18 de noviembre de 1960Construcción ? - ?Financiamiento PúblicoUniversidad Universidad del ZuliaSitio web oficial[editar datos en Wikidata] El Hospital Universitario de M...

Mt. RoweMount Rowe as seen from the Gunstock Mountain Resort parking lotHighest pointElevation1,680 ft (510 m)Coordinates43°32′43″N 71°22′41″W / 43.54528°N 71.37806°W / 43.54528; -71.37806GeographyLocationTown of Gilford, Belknap County,New HampshireParent rangeBelknap MountainsTopo mapUSGS Laconia, NH Mount Rowe, elevation 1,680 feet (510 m), is a mountain located north of Gunstock Mountain in the Belknap Range, Belknap County, New Hamp...

 

Politics of Turkey Constitution History Secularism Human rights LGBT rights Legislature Grand National Assembly (Parliament) Speaker: Numan Kurtulmuş Leader of the Main Opposition Özgür Özel Political parties Executive President (list) Recep Tayyip Erdoğan Vice President Cevdet Yılmaz Cabinet (list) Current cabinet (67th) Ministries National Security Council Governors Judiciary Constitutional Court President: Zühtü Arslan Court of Cassation President: Mehmet Akarca Court of Accounts P...